The key figure of Russian industrialization was:
Alexander III.
Nicholas II.
Ivan Denisovich.
Sergei Witte.
Romanticism emphasized:
a commitment to group solidarity.
a focus on feeling, emotion, and imagination.
fascination with the future.
the common and the every day.
__________ spurred the rise in Christian missionary work in East Africa in the nineteenth century.
The spread of Islam in the region
The rising native interest in monotheism
The positive native reception to church establishment
The persistence of the slave trade in East Africa
The Sino Japanese War:
marked the acceptance of Western style imperialism by China when it took Korea from Japan.
began as each country tried to keep the other from taking over Tibet.
became a two power conflict when Russia refused to honor its alliance with Japan.
forced China to cede Taiwan and the Liaodong peninsula to Japan.
Using the Schlieffen Plan:
Germany launched a massive invasion of the Warsaw region of Poland.
France declared war on Austria.
Italy invaded the Austrian Tyrol.
Germany invaded France by way of Belgium.
In appraising the work of Mustapha Kemal Ataturk, one can say that:
he finally succeeded in unifying Persian society.
he maintained a strict Islamic consistency in all aspects of Turkish life.
he created a secular Turkish state that embraced many of aspects of a modern Western nation.
no real change from the traditional Ottoman ways ever occurred under his rule.
Hitler wrote "Mein Kampf":
during World War I.
before the Beer Hall Putsch of 1923.
while in jail after the failed Beer Hall Putsch.
during the early years of the Great Depression.
__________ was increasingly seen by United States as a crucial element in American defense strategy in the Pacific during the winter of 1949-1950.
Oahu
Hong Kong
Taiwan
Sakhalin
Leonid Brezhnev:
valued stability above all, and blocked any significant attempts to deal with economic or social problems.
greatly increased the funding for new agricultural areas in Kazakhstan and Mongolia.
sharply reduced the powers of the KGB and Interior Ministry.
was the first to finally break with Stalinism and to conciliate the Czech regime.
The movement for civil rights in the United States during the 1950s and 1960s:
was strongly opposed by Malcolm X, a white political leader from Illinois.
created a "white backlash" which aided a national trend toward greater political conservatism.
received no governmental support until 1974.
was a catalyst which energized the Indian and black minorities, who together composed thirty four percent of the nation's population.

Alexander III.
Nicholas II.
Ivan Denisovich.
Sergei Witte.
Romanticism emphasized:
a commitment to group solidarity.
a focus on feeling, emotion, and imagination.
fascination with the future.
the common and the every day.
__________ spurred the rise in Christian missionary work in East Africa in the nineteenth century.
The spread of Islam in the region
The rising native interest in monotheism
The positive native reception to church establishment
The persistence of the slave trade in East Africa
The Sino Japanese War:
marked the acceptance of Western style imperialism by China when it took Korea from Japan.
began as each country tried to keep the other from taking over Tibet.
became a two power conflict when Russia refused to honor its alliance with Japan.
forced China to cede Taiwan and the Liaodong peninsula to Japan.
Using the Schlieffen Plan:
Germany launched a massive invasion of the Warsaw region of Poland.
France declared war on Austria.
Italy invaded the Austrian Tyrol.
Germany invaded France by way of Belgium.
In appraising the work of Mustapha Kemal Ataturk, one can say that:
he finally succeeded in unifying Persian society.
he maintained a strict Islamic consistency in all aspects of Turkish life.
he created a secular Turkish state that embraced many of aspects of a modern Western nation.
no real change from the traditional Ottoman ways ever occurred under his rule.
Hitler wrote "Mein Kampf":
during World War I.
before the Beer Hall Putsch of 1923.
while in jail after the failed Beer Hall Putsch.
during the early years of the Great Depression.
__________ was increasingly seen by United States as a crucial element in American defense strategy in the Pacific during the winter of 1949-1950.
Oahu
Hong Kong
Taiwan
Sakhalin
Leonid Brezhnev:
valued stability above all, and blocked any significant attempts to deal with economic or social problems.
greatly increased the funding for new agricultural areas in Kazakhstan and Mongolia.
sharply reduced the powers of the KGB and Interior Ministry.
was the first to finally break with Stalinism and to conciliate the Czech regime.
The movement for civil rights in the United States during the 1950s and 1960s:
was strongly opposed by Malcolm X, a white political leader from Illinois.
created a "white backlash" which aided a national trend toward greater political conservatism.
received no governmental support until 1974.
was a catalyst which energized the Indian and black minorities, who together composed thirty four percent of the nation's population.